The last week or so has been a bit hectic cause i've been traveling back to Wilmington to work monday through wednesday with my old crew plus Mikey who is going to have some big shoes to fill, but things have been going good especially when the Guinea Keats finally arrived after being shipped to the wrong address and all of household worried to death over their fate even though it all worked out fine cause we have not lost one yet which is pretty incredible since they were shipped when they were a day old.
The chickens grew so much when i was gone those 3 days last week that i barely recognized them, and we have moved them twice now and they seem to be doing a darn good job at pecking up all the grass and leaving behind golden treasured.
There is also a new addition to the farm that we are still trying to finish the goat Ms.
Floretta's living quarters, which has been at slow pace cause she can be tethered out to keep the grass nice and trim. The dogs and her are finally getting to the point of respect to which they will leave one another alone unless they both are interested in some sniffing or headbutting action.
We started to build a fence to house Floretta like a week before she was set to arrive and it has yet to be finished, granted it is the first fence anyone here had put up and when your dealing with cedar post that you foraged out of the woods it can become quite difficult for novices like ourselves. We only had enough 5 ft square fencing to get around half of the field and had to figure out how to make the 3ft fencing we had seem daunting for the goat to hurdle, and we finally came to the conclusion to utilize the bamboo we have and make horizontal posts between the cedar posts which only came to us after two failed attempts at other methods. But hopefully after a couple more days of working on the fence for a couple hours a day cause that is all we can stand Floretta will have a home to graze on and finally stop baaing while being tied up.
Last thursday Noel and i started to summon the vibes of the field that we were going to start the hugokulture beds on first which consisted of marking out our rows with the flow of the field, then digging out 6 inches of the topsoil and inserting dead and rotten wood from the edge of the forest, then putting the topsoil back grass down and putting compost on top of that to put the first crops on. When i was first offered this experience i was told no digging or tilling gardening but this type of beds last any where from 25-50 years with little water and great benefits to the soil and other beds adjacent to them, so the digging was well worth it. Mike Slaton who has been helping out on some our various projects sure knows how to find the best rotten wood, we don't have it completely finished yet, but we both left it to come to Wilmington so it will be done the day i get back with much hope.
We started to build a fence to house Floretta like a week before she was set to arrive and it has yet to be finished, granted it is the first fence anyone here had put up and when your dealing with cedar post that you foraged out of the woods it can become quite difficult for novices like ourselves. We only had enough 5 ft square fencing to get around half of the field and had to figure out how to make the 3ft fencing we had seem daunting for the goat to hurdle, and we finally came to the conclusion to utilize the bamboo we have and make horizontal posts between the cedar posts which only came to us after two failed attempts at other methods. But hopefully after a couple more days of working on the fence for a couple hours a day cause that is all we can stand Floretta will have a home to graze on and finally stop baaing while being tied up.
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